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Date: 06-19-2017

Case Style: Jaime A. Scher v. John F. Burke

Case Number: S230104

Judge: J. Kruger

Court: Supreme Court of California

Plaintiff's Attorney: June Ailin

Defendant's Attorney: Bennett Kerns

Description: In Gion v. City of Santa Cruz (1970) 2 Cal.3d 29, this court held that
private owners of certain coastal property who allowed the public to use the
property for recreational purposes over a period of years thereby impliedly
dedicated property rights to the public. In response to that decision, the
Legislature enacted Civil Code section 1009, which limits the circumstances in
which courts may find implied dedication of private coastal property. (Civ. Code,
§ 1009 (section 1009); see id., subds. (e)–(g).) The statute further provides that
“no use” of private noncoastal property after the statute’s 1972 effective date
ordinarily may give rise to “a vested right” in the public to continue using the
property permanently, unless the property owner makes an express, irrevocable
offer to dedicate the property to public use. (Id., subd. (b).)
The question in this case concerns the application of section 1009 to a
claim that private owners of noncoastal property have impliedly dedicated their
land for use as a public road. Plaintiffs argue that the restriction on implied
2
dedication in section 1009, subdivision (b) does not apply to property used by the
public for nonrecreational vehicle access, as opposed to property used for
recreational purposes. We agree with the Court of Appeal that the statute draws
no such distinction, and we accordingly affirm its judgment.
I.
Plaintiffs Jaime Scher and Jane McAllister own land in the Topanga
Canyon area of Los Angeles County. They would like to access their property by
driving on two roadways that cross their neighbors’ land, rather than taking other,
less convenient routes to their property. Some of those neighbors would prefer
otherwise, however, and have blocked the roadways with gates.
Scher and McAllister sued. Among other things, they sought a declaration
that their neighbors (or their neighbors’ predecessors) had “acquiesced to the
dedication” of the routes as public roadways. The trial court agreed. As relevant
here, the court concluded that the neighbors or their predecessors had impliedly
offered to dedicate the roadways to public use. First, the court found that an offer
to dedicate the roadways was “implied in fact,” based on several “Declarations
and Grants of Easements,” as well as certain maps prepared by the federal
government, which previously owned the land at issue. Second, the court found
that an offer to dedicate was “implied in law,” because the public had used the
roadways “for more than the period of prescription” of five years. (See Gion v.
City of Santa Cruz, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 38 (Gion).) These offers of dedication,
the court continued, had been “accepted by the public[’s] use of the property.” 1

1 Scher and McAllister also sought a declaration that they should benefit
from an easement across the roads. The trial court accepted their arguments in
part, but the Court of Appeal did not. These claims are not now before us.
3
The trial court also considered whether section 1009 barred any finding of
implied dedication. The court concluded that section 1009 is inapplicable because
the land at issue is not coastal property, and because “section 1009 does not
restrict the implied dedication of public roads for nonrecreational uses.”
The Court of Appeal reversed. The court held that section 1009,
subdivision (b) unambiguously “bars all public use, not just recreational use, from
developing into an implied public dedication.” In so holding, the court disagreed
with other cases that had described section 1009, subdivision (b) as applying only
to recreational uses. (Hanshaw v. Long Valley Road Assn. (2004) 116 Cal.App.4th
471, 484–485 (Hanshaw); see also Pulido v. Pereira (2015) 234 Cal.App.4th
1246, 1252 (Pulido); Bustillos v. Murphy (2002) 96 Cal.App.4th 1277, 1280–1281
(Bustillos).) Having concluded that evidence of post-1972 use of the roadways
was inadmissible, and finding no other adequate evidentiary basis for finding that
the roadways had been impliedly dedicated to public use, the Court of Appeal
directed the trial court to enter a declaratory judgment in favor of defendants.
We granted review to resolve the disagreement among the Courts of Appeal
about whether section 1009, subdivision (b) applies to nonrecreational use of
private noncoastal property.
2
II.
This case concerns the law of dedication, under which a private landowner
may transfer an interest in real property to the public. Under the common law, a

2 Given the limited scope of our review, we do not address any questions
about the proper application of section 1009, subdivision (b) to a claim that an
implied offer to dedicate a roadway was accepted by public use. Nor do we
address plaintiffs’ argument that the Court of Appeal erred in applying the
substantial evidence standard in reviewing the trial court’s judgment.
4
dedication may be made either expressly or by implication. (People v. Marin
County (1894) 103 Cal. 223, 227; see also, e.g., County of Los Angeles v. Berk
(1980) 26 Cal.3d 201, 219 (Berk).) Common law dedication, whether express or
implied, requires both an offer of dedication and an acceptance of that offer by the
public. (Diamond Match Co. v. Savercool (1933) 218 Cal. 665, 669.) An offer of
dedication may be “implied in fact” if there is proof of the owner’s actual consent
to the dedication. (Union Transp. Co. v. Sacramento County (1954) 42 Cal.2d
235, 241; Gion, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 38.) An offer of dedication may also be
“implied by law” (Union Transp. Co., supra, 42 Cal.2d at p. 241) if the public has
openly and continuously made adverse use of the property for more than the
prescriptive period (Gion, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 38).
More than 40 years ago, we applied the doctrine of implied dedication in
Gion, supra, 2 Cal.3d 29, which was consolidated for decision with Dietz v. King
(Dietz). Both cases concerned whether an interest in private coastal property had
been impliedly dedicated for public use. (Id. at pp. 34–39.) Dietz also concerned
the claimed dedication of an unimproved dirt road leading to that coastal property.
(Id. at p. 36.) In addressing these claims, we first resolved two general questions
about the doctrine of implied in law dedication that had caused confusion in the
lower courts. We explained that the law of implied dedication for public use,
unlike the law of adverse possession or easement by prescriptive rights, does not
require a showing of a personal claim of right. Rather, litigants “seeking to show
that land has been dedicated to the public need only produce evidence that persons
have used the land as they would have used public land” for more than the
prescriptive period of five years. (Id. at p. 39.) When such a showing has been
made, we further held, the law will not presume that the public has used the
property under a license from the owner. (Id. at pp. 40–41.) An owner who seeks
to negate a finding of intent to dedicate the lands therefore “must either
5
affirmatively prove that he has granted the public a license to use his property or
demonstrate that he has made a bona fide attempt to prevent public use.” (Id. at
p. 41.)
We next considered “whether the rules governing shoreline property differ
from those governing other types of property, particularly roads.” (Gion, supra, 2
Cal.3d at p. 41.) We acknowledged that “[m]ost of the case law involving
dedication in this state has concerned roads and land bordering roads.
[Citations.]” (Ibid.) We held, however, that “[t]he rules governing implied
dedication apply with equal force . . . to land used by the public for purposes other
than as a roadway” (id. at pp. 41–42), citing cases concerning dedication of rights
in park land, athletic fields, and beaches (id. at p. 42).
Putting all of these principles together, we held “that there was an implied
dedication of property rights” in both Gion and Dietz, based on evidence of
continuous use of the contested coastal property for public recreation purposes.
(Gion, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 43.) In Gion, we noted, “the public use of the land
[was] accentuated by the active participation of the city in maintaining the land
and helping the public to enjoy it.” (Id. at pp. 43–44.) But in both cases, we
considered it determinative that “the public used the land in public ways, as if
the land was owned by a government, as if the land were a public park.” (Id. at
p. 43.)
“Commentators were severe in their criticism” of the decision. (Berk,
supra, 26 Cal.3d at p. 228 (dis. opn. of Clark, J.), citing sources.) Among other
things, many commentators thought it inequitable that “[t]hose landowners who
were neighborly and hospitable in permitting public use were penalized by GionDietz
by loss of their land, while those excluding the public by fencing or other
means were rewarded by retention of their exclusive use.” (Id. at p. 229.)
Commentators also criticized the decision as “counterproductive,” because it
6
encouraged landowners to “exclude the public” from their land to avoid implied
dedication. (Ibid.)
The year after we decided Gion, the Legislature enacted section 1009.
(Stats. 1971, ch. 941, § 2, p. 1846, chaptering Sen. Bill No. 504 (1971 Reg.
Sess.).) Subdivision (a) of section 1009 recites the Legislature’s findings that “[i]t
is in the best interests of the state to encourage owners of private real property to
continue to make their lands available for public recreational use” (§ 1009, subd.
(a)(1)); that “[o]wners of private real property are confronted with the threat of
loss of rights in their property if they allow or continue to allow members of the
public to use, enjoy or pass over their property for recreational purposes” (id.,
subd. (a)(2)); and that “[t]he stability and marketability of record titles is clouded
by such public use, thereby compelling the owner to exclude the public from his
property” (id., subd. (a)(3)).
In subdivisions (e) through (g) of section 1009, the Legislature addressed
dedication of coastal property, defined as property that “lies within 1,000 yards
inland” of certain markers. (§ 1009, subd. (e).) Of particular significance,
subdivision (f) instructs that, following the statute’s 1972 effective date, “[n]o
use” of coastal property “by the public . . . shall constitute evidence or be
admissible as evidence that the public or any governmental body or unit has any
right in such property by implied dedication if the owner” posts signs (see Civ.
Code, § 1008), publishes a notice in a local newspaper (see Gov. Code, § 6066),
records a notice (see Civ. Code, § 813), or enters into a written agreement with a
governmental agency “providing for the public use of such land.” (Id., subd.
(f)(1)–(3).)
Subdivision (b) of section 1009, the focus of our inquiry here, applies to
noncoastal property. (Cf. § 1009, subd. (e).) It instructs that “[r]egardless of
whether or not a private owner of real property has recorded a notice of consent to
7
use of any particular property pursuant to Section 813 of the Civil Code or has
posted signs on such property pursuant to Section 1008 of the Civil Code, except
as otherwise provided in subdivision (d), no use of such property by the public
after the effective date of this section shall ever ripen to confer upon the public or
any governmental body or unit a vested right to continue to make such use
permanently, in the absence of an express written irrevocable offer of dedication
of such property to such use . . . .” (Id., subd. (b).)
3
III.
A.
The question in this case is whether section 1009, subdivision (b) applies to
nonrecreational use of roadways for vehicle access as it applies to recreational use
of other private noncoastal property. We begin, as always, by examining the text
of the statute, as “ ‘the statutory language is generally the most reliable
indicator’ ” of legislative intent. (People v. Castillolopez (2016) 63 Cal.4th 322,
329, quoting Alford v. Superior Court (2003) 29 Cal.4th 1033, 1040.) Subdivision
(b) instructs, as relevant here, that “whether or not a private owner of real property
has recorded a notice of consent to use of any particular property . . . or has posted
signs on such property . . . , no use of such property by the public after the

3 The exception in section 1009, subdivision (d), which is not relevant here,
concerns private lands improved, cleaned, or maintained by public entities:
“Where a governmental entity is using private lands by an expenditure of public
funds on visible improvements on or across such lands or on the cleaning or
maintenance related to the public use of such lands in such a manner so that the
owner knows or should know that the public is making such use of his land, such
use, including any public use reasonably related to the purposes of such
improvement, in the absence of either express permission by the owner to continue
such use or the taking by the owner of reasonable steps to enjoin, remove or
prohibit such use, shall after five years ripen to confer upon the governmental
entity a vested right to continue such use.”
8
effective date of this section shall ever ripen to confer upon the public . . . a vested
right to continue to make such use permanently, in the absence of an express
written irrevocable offer of dedication of such property to such use . . . .” (§ 1009,
subd. (b).) This prohibition on reliance on post-effective-date use of private
property does not distinguish between recreational use and nonrecreational use.
Rather, the prohibition is written in categorical terms: “no use” of the subject
property after March 1972 “shall ever ripen” into an implied dedication of the
property to the public.
In arguing that section 1009, subdivision (b) nevertheless applies only to
recreational uses, plaintiffs point to the legislative findings in section 1009,
subdivision (a). As plaintiffs emphasize, the findings make clear that the
Legislature’s primary concern in enacting section 1009 was to “encourage owners
of private real property to continue to make their lands available for public
recreational use.” (§ 1009, subd. (a)(1), italics added.) Plaintiffs argue that
subdivision (b)’s reference to the use of “such property” must be understood to
refer to these findings, and thus should be interpreted to mean “ ‘private real
property made available for public recreational use’ (paraphrasing subdivision
(a)). (Hanshaw v. Long Valley Road Ass’n, supra, 116 Cal.App.4th at p. 485.)”
As a textual matter, this is an implausible reading. To interpret the phrase
“such property” as plaintiffs suggest, we would have to skip over its immediate
antecedents in section 1009, subdivision (b) — “real property” and “any particular
property,” neither of which connotes any limitation to property made available for
public recreational use — and reach all the way back to section 1009, subdivision
(a). We would, moreover, have to accept plaintiffs’ invitation to rely on a
“paraphras[e]” of subdivision (a), rather than on the actual text of the subdivision
— which also refers to “private real property” in general terms. This argument
bends the usual rules of textual interpretation past their breaking point.
9
The principal thrust of plaintiffs’ argument, however, relies less on the
statutory text and more on a set of inferences about legislative intent based on
the findings in section 1009, subdivision (a). Plaintiffs argue that because
subdivision (a) reveals that the Legislature’s primary concern was encouraging
landowners to open their property to public recreational use, the prohibition in
section 1009, subdivision (b) should be understood as implicitly limited to public
recreational uses. This argument, too, is unavailing. As a general rule, when the
Legislature uses a term in one provision of a statute but omits it from another —
as it did when it referred to “recreational use” in subdivision (a), but referred to
“use” alone in subdivision (b) — we generally presume that the Legislature did
so deliberately, in order “ ‘to convey a different meaning.’ ” (Klein v. United
States of America (2010) 50 Cal.4th 68, 80.) We have no reason to doubt that
the choice was deliberate in this case. Interpreting subdivision (b) as written
creates no apparent inconsistency with the Legislature’s findings in subdivision
(a). The Legislature might reasonably have concluded that unless subdivision
(b) extended to all uses of privately owned property, landowners skeptical of
their ability to distinguish recreational users from nonrecreational users might
decide to exclude all users alike to avoid “the threat of loss of rights in their
property” (§ 1009, subd. (a)(2)) or clouding “[t]he stability or marketability of
record titles” (id., subd. (a)(3)). And, to the extent that the Legislature’s goal
was to encourage landowners to continue to make their property open for public
use more generally, interpreting subdivision (b) as written is consistent with that
aim. In sum, the Legislature’s expressed concern with public recreational use of
private lands in subdivision (a) “ ‘does not mean that a court may add this
concept as a separate requirement in the operative sections of the statute’ ” when
the Legislature chose not to do so. (Equilon Enterprises v. Consumer Cause,
Inc. (2002) 29 Cal.4th 53, 61 (Equilon Enterprises) [rejecting argument that
10
Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16 (dismissal of strategic lawsuit against
public participation) should be interpreted in light of its preamble to require a
demonstration that a challenged claim was brought with the intent to chill the
defendant’s exercise of constitutional speech or petition rights].)
Nor is plaintiffs’ proposed recreational use limitation implicit in the
remaining provisions of section 1009 or other provisions of the statutory scheme.
Plaintiffs point to subdivision (c) of section 1009, which provides that “[i]n
addition to any procedure authorized by law and not prohibited by this section, an
irrevocable offer of dedication may be made in the manner prescribed in Section
7050 of the Government Code,” a provision authorizing property owners to make
irrevocable offers of dedication for public purposes by recording the offer in the
same manner as a conveyance of real property. (See Gov. Code, § 7050.) Based
on this language, plaintiffs reason that “methods of dedication” that fall outside of
Government Code section 7050 are not completely eliminated by subdivision (b)
of Civil Code section 1009. This is true, but it does not help their case. No one
doubts that the law continues to permit dedications of noncoastal property to the
public under provisions of law other than Government Code section 7050. (See,
e.g., Gov. Code, §§ 66475, 66477; see also id., § 7050 [noting that the procedures
set forth in the section are “alternative to any other procedure authorized by
law”].) It is a separate question whether the law continues to permit courts to find
implied dedication based solely on post-1972 nonrecreational use of defendants’
property as a roadway. It does not.
Plaintiffs also point to Civil Code sections 813 and 1008, which provide
that landowners may record a specified notice (§ 813) or post signs at particular
intervals (§ 1008) to indicate that the use of their property is permissive (and,
thus, not adverse). Plaintiffs argue that if section 1009, subdivision (b) prohibits
reliance on any use of noncoastal property, not just recreational use, then these
11
provisions are superfluous. While we ordinarily construe enactments to avoid
rendering any provision superfluous (Dix v. Superior Court (1991) 53 Cal.3d
442, 459), there is no superfluity here. Plaintiffs themselves acknowledge (as
they must) that these provisions retain relevance for owners of coastal property.
(§ 1009, subd. (f)(1) & (2).) The provisions may also bear on whether a
landowner has given “express permission” for the public to use lands improved
by the expenditure of government funds. (§ 1009, subd. (d).) And in any event,
sections 813 and 1008 expressly relate to prescriptive rights, regardless of
whether implied dedication is at issue. (Civ. Code, § 813 [providing that the
prescribed notice is “conclusive evidence” of permissive use “in any judicial
proceeding involving the issue as to whether all or any portion of such land has
been dedicated to public use or whether any user has a prescriptive right,”
italics added]; Civ. Code, § 1008 [providing that if a landowner posts certain
signs, “[n]o use by any person or persons, no matter how long continued, of any
land, shall ever ripen into an easement by prescription,” italics added].) In short,
sections 813 and 1008 retain force even if we read subdivision (b) of section
1009 in accordance with its terms.
Finally, plaintiffs contend that interpreting section 1009, subdivision (b) to
apply to the implied dedication of private property for public nonrecreational
vehicle access would effectively abrogate a substantial body of case law
concerning the dedication of roadways. In plaintiffs’ view, this “would be a major
departure from long-standing law without a clear expression of legislative inten[t]
to do so.” It is true, as we noted in Gion, that “[m]ost of the case law involving
dedication in this state has concerned roads and land bordering roads.
[Citations.]” (Gion, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 41.) This, we explained, “arises from
the ease with which one can define a road, the frequent need for roadways through
private property, and perhaps also the relative frequency with which express
12
dedications of roadways are made.” (Ibid.) But as Gion explained, there was also,
at the time, a substantial and long-standing body of case law concerning the
implied dedication of land for other purposes, including for use as parks, athletic
fields, and beaches. (Id. at pp. 41–42, citing cases.) Gion concluded, based on
this history, that “[t]he rules governing implied dedication apply with equal force
. . . to land used by the public for purposes other than as a roadway.” (Ibid.)
Subdivision (b) of section 1009 was clearly designed to alter this body of
law, but it does not eliminate it entirely. Subdivision (b) contains an exception for
situations in which a governmental entity engages in improvements or
maintenance related to the public use of subject property (§ 1009, subd. (b); see
id., subd. (d)), and does not apply to coastal property (id., subds. (e)–(g)). The
provision also operates prospectively only, forbidding only reliance on post-1972
public use to support a claim of implied dedication. The statute, however,
contains no indication that the Legislature intended for these alterations to apply
differently to land used by the public for nonrecreational roadway purposes, as
opposed to recreational purposes.
Plaintiffs also contend that the Legislature has acquiesced in judicial
opinions interpreting section 1009 to concern only recreational use. Arguments
based on supposed legislative acquiescence rarely do much to persuade. (See,
e.g., People v. Brown (2012) 54 Cal.4th 314, 327–328.) Regardless, while “it may
sometimes be true that legislative inaction signals acquiescence when there exists
both a well-developed body of law interpreting a statutory provision and numerous
amendments to a statute without altering the interpreted provision, that is not the
case here.” (Olson v. Automobile Club of Southern California (2008) 42 Cal.4th
1142, 1156 (Olson).)
For one thing, plaintiffs fail to identify a “well-developed body of law.”
(Olson, supra, 42 Cal.4th at p. 1156.) Plaintiffs identify seven court opinions they
13
claim support their position, but they concede that two “never mention[]” section
1009, two more “found it unnecessary to consider the statute,” and another found
the statute “inapplicable because the plaintiff was seeking a prescriptive
easement.” Of the remaining two cases, one opined only in dictum on whether
subdivision (b) of section 1009 reaches nonrecreational use. (See Bustillos, supra,
96 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1280–1281.) True, some of these cases nevertheless include
language favorable to plaintiffs. (See ibid. [“The statute effectuates this purpose
by providing that no recreational use of private property ‘shall ever ripen to confer
upon the public . . . a vested right to continue to make such use permanently’
unless the property owner dedicates the land to public use and the dedication of
property is accepted by the government,” quoting § 1009, subd. (b)]; see also
Pulido, supra, 234 Cal.App.4th at p. 1252 [“[T]he ‘use of such property’ refers
back to subdivision (a)(1), which explains that the subject of the statute is the
public recreational use of private real property.”].) But plaintiffs point to only a
single decision, rendered in 2004, that squarely addressed the question before us.
(See Hanshaw, supra, 116 Cal.App.4th at p. 485.)
For another thing, section 1009 has not been the subject of “numerous
amendments.” (Olson, supra, 42 Cal.4th at p. 1156.) Indeed, section 1009 has not
once been amended since it was first enacted in 1971. The fact that the
Legislature has not passed legislation for the sole purpose of addressing the
holdings (much less the dicta) of Hanshaw, Bustillos, or Pulido is not particularly
telling. As we have often observed, “ ‘legislative inaction alone does not
necessarily imply legislative approval.’ ” (People v. Whitmer (2014) 59 Cal.4th
733, 741.) Legislative inaction may instead reflect nothing more than “ ‘ “the
sheer pressure of other and more important business, political considerations, or a
tendency to trust . . . the courts to correct their own errors.” ’ ” (Ibid.) We cannot
14
here conclude from the Legislature’s inaction that the Legislature has approved
plaintiffs’ preferred construction of section 1009, subdivision (b).
B.
Where statutory text “is unambiguous and provides a clear answer, we need
go no further.” (Microsoft Corp. v. Franchise Tax Bd. (2006) 39 Cal.4th 750,
758.) We observe, however, that the available legislative history and historical
circumstances surrounding the enactment only buttress our reading of the statute.
(See, e.g., Equilon Enterprises, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 61; Briggs v. Eden Council
for Hope & Opportunity (1999) 19 Cal.4th 1106, 1119–1120.)
As all parties agree, section 1009 was enacted in response to this court’s
decision in Gion. The Legislature’s response, it bears noting, was not simply to
invalidate the decision wholesale. Rather, the Legislature affirmed certain aspects
of the decision by, for example, recognizing the significance of active
governmental participation in the maintenance of the property to determine
whether an implied dedication has occurred. (§ 1009, subd. (d); see Gion, supra, 2
Cal.3d at p. 44.) The Legislature also endorsed Gion’s application of the law of
implied dedication to open beach properties by not only affirming the law as
applied in the coastal region, but making it easier to find implied dedication in the
coastal region than elsewhere in the state. (Compare § 1009, subd. (b) with id.,
subd. (e).) The scope of this response suggests that the Legislature was not
narrowly focused on the particular circumstances at issue in Gion, but intended to
take a more comprehensive look at the law of implied dedication on which the
decision rested. The nature of the response to our decision also tends to
undermine any argument that the Legislature intended to create an implicit
exception for implied dedication of roadways. Dietz itself not only concerned
dedication of a roadway (Gion, supra, 2 Cal.3d at pp. 36–38), but also held that
“[t]he rules governing implied dedication apply with equal force . . . to land used
15
by the public for purposes other than as a roadway” (id. at pp. 41–42). Given this
explicit discussion in the very opinion that prompted the Legislature to enact
section 1009, it is hard to imagine that the Legislature intended to exempt
roadways from the reach of that provision but simply declined to say so. (See also
§ 1009, subd. (e) [mentioning, in defining the coastal region, “the nearest public
road or highway”].)4
As the Court of Appeal noted, the available legislative history materials
bear the point out. The Court of Appeal took judicial notice of three documents of
particular significance. The first is the Legislative Counsel’s Digest, which
advised that the legislation would “[p]rohibit[] any use of private land, except
specified ocean frontage land, after effective date of act from conferring a vested
right in public with specified exception for a public entity that makes visible
improvement on such property . . . .” (Legis. Counsel’s Dig., Sen. Bill. No. 504
(1971 Reg. Sess.) 3 Stats. 1971, Summary Dig., p. 136, italics added.) The
second, the enrolled bill memorandum to the Governor, likewise advised that
“[t]he bill . . . prohibits any use of private land, except specified ocean frontage
land, after the effective date of the bill from conferring a vested right in the public,
with specified exceptions.” (Legis. Sec., Enrolled Bill Memorandum to Governor
on Sen. Bill. No. 504 (1971 Reg. Sess.) Oct. 7, 1971, p. 1.) The third, an

4 An analysis by the Assembly Committee on Planning and Land Use
discusses, regarding the earlier version of the legislation that became section 1009,
whether the doctrine of implied dedication should be “delete[d]” or instead
“controll[ed].” (Assem. Com. on Planning and Land Use, Analysis of Sen. Bill
No. 504 (1971 Reg. Sess.) July 20, 1971, p. 2.) The analysis observes that “[t]he
use of . . . implied dedication to control deceptive practices in subdivision sales
(i.e. such as promised roads, etc.) may be an incidental benefit of the doctrine.”
(Ibid.) This further suggests that the Legislature was aware that the legislation
could affect implied dedication of roadways.
16
Assembly committee analysis of proposed amendments advised that, if the
amendments were included in the bill, “[t]he doctrine of implied dedication would
be deleted prospectively except for [in] the ‘coastal zone’ . . . .” (Assem. Com. on
Planning and Land Use, Analysis of Proposed Amendments to Sen. Bill No. 504
(1971 Reg. Sess.) July 20, 1971, p. 1.)
These materials are by no means dispositive. But we have treated similar
materials as entitled to some weight. (See Jones v. Lodge at Torrey Pines
Partnership (2008) 42 Cal.4th 1158, 1170 [Legislative Counsel’s summaries];
Dyna-Med, Inc. v. Fair Employment & Housing Com. (1987) 43 Cal.3d 1379,
1399 [enrolled bill memorandum]; Horiike v. Coldwell Banker Residential
Brokerage Co. (2016) 1 Cal.5th 1024, 1037 [Assembly Judiciary Committee bill
analysis].) Plaintiffs, in any event, identify nothing in the legislative history that
points in the other direction. In short, to the extent the legislative history is
relevant to the analysis, it bolsters our conclusion that section 1009,
subdivision (b) contains no implicit exception for nonrecreational use of
roadways.
5

5 Accordingly, to the extent they are inconsistent with our opinion, we
disapprove Hanshaw v. Long Valley Road Assn., supra, 116 Cal.App.4th at
pages 484–485; Pulido v. Pereira, supra, 234 Cal.App.4th at page 1252; and
Bustillos v. Murphy, supra, 96 Cal.App.4th at pages 1280–1281.

Outcome: The judgment of the Court of Appeal is affirmed and the case remanded to the trial court for entry of judgment in favor of defendants.

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